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Elections 2016

Elections 2016

The Primary Race

Clinton Wins D.C. Primary

Hillary Clinton won the final primary race of 2016 with a decisive victory in Tuesday’s Democratic primary in Washington D.C. She was declared the Democratic Party’s presumptive nominee last week, but Bernie Sanders has vowed to fight on to the convention.The two are meeting tonight in D.C. Come in and get caught up on the latest news, and see live results.

Meg Kelly/NPR

Current Status

District of Columbia Democratic Primary

As of June 14, 2016, 10:14 p.m. EDT

100% of precincts reporting (143 of 143)

Name

Votes

Percent

Hillary Clinton

74,566

78.6%

Bernie Sanders

19,990

21.0%

Other

203

<1%

Total

94,759

100.0%

Polls close at 8 p.m. EDT

Source: AP

Race To The Nomination

Democratic Delegate Tracker

2,383 needed to win

Clinton

2,807 (2,205 + 602)

Sanders

1,894 (1,846 + 48)

Pledged delegates

Superdelegates

Democratic delegate totals include delegates determined via state primaries and caucuses and superdelegates.

After winners are called, state parties do not always immediately award all delegates (and AP does not always immediately account for all delegates in its estimates). Sometimes the delay is to allow for full tabulation of votes, or because there are further steps involved in the state party nomination process. See the NPR Delegate Tracker for detailed state delegate allocations, including delegates outstanding.

1,237 needed to win

After winners are called, state parties do not always immediately award all delegates (and AP does not always immediately account for all delegates in its estimates). Sometimes the delay is to allow for full tabulation of votes, or because there are further steps involved in the state party nomination process. See the NPR Delegate Tracker for detailed state delegate allocations, including delegates outstanding.

NPR Politics Podcast

On Orlando

Another mass shooting has taken center stage in the Presidential race. Whether it will result in any policy changes is another question, but Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump — in separate speeches today — offered starkly different views of what their respective policy changes would look like. This episode, campaign reporter Scott Detrow, national political correspondent Mara Liasson, editor/correspondent Ron Elving, and justice correspondent Carrie Johnson. More coverage at nprpolitics.org. Email the show at nprpolitics@npr.org . And listen in to Election Essentials on NPR One .

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